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U.S.S. Olympia is moored right across on the opposite shore. I stood on Olympia's deck and saw U.S.S. New Jersey. From the era of the pre-dreadnoughts to the last of the super dreadnoughts. I'm afraid I was the only there who got it.I've a nice book about the Iowa class battleships, and Jane's book on all battleships built since Dreadnought. Went on a nice tour of the New Jersey moored at Camden, NJ across the river from Philly a few years ago. My preparatory reading allowed me some "self-guided" viewing of the various areas open to the public on the New Jersey. Talk about one massive machine!! By the early 80s it had been refitted with cruise missiles and Phalanx air defense equipment, and of course retained its nine 16" guns
In reference to SaparotRob's citing costliness in personnel and resources, I can't speak for the New Jersey's post WW2 deployment during the Korean and Vietnam wars, but it's my understanding that during its Lebanese war deployment in the early 80s, the New Jersey had to be accompanied by an entire carrier group to provide air cover, as well as further offensive capability. That's costly in personnel and resources. It's a big target.
If you ever have a chance to visit any of the Iowa-class battleships (Iowa, Missouri, New Jersey, Wisconsin) or any other museum battleships like the Texas, do it.
BTW I've stood on the decks of three Iowas.
Washington vs. Kirishima- Willis Lee, gold medals in the 1920 Olympics for team rifle and pistol shooting and knew radar perhaps better than the operators themselves nailed Kirishima in a night battle that may have saved Guadalcanal from being taken over by the Japanese. Washington, Idaho and some DD's were I believe the only remaining USN assets afloat.Assuming you're talking about dreadnoughts, Jutland comes to mind, and it goes into the early part of WWII. I think both Pearl Harbor and the fate of Force Z were the big wake-up calls for the Gun Club, but there were slugfests both before and after those events (Bismarck before, Washington vs Kirishima and Surigao Strait afterwards, though the latter was more a mugging than a battle.)
I don't think it can really be pinpointed to one event, but 1941/2 marked the change, it seems to me.
Sure, in some circumstances, but they'd be very expensive to build or rebuild, and then operate, while the guns themselves suffer limits that modern guided weaponry don't.
Building a new class of BBG would probably get killed off early in the procurement process from a cost/benefit analysis.
All of the above.
My photos of the Olympia on that same trip:U.S.S. Olympia is moored right across on the opposite shore. I stood on Olympia's deck and saw U.S.S. New Jersey. From the era of the pre-dreadnoughts to the last of the super dreadnoughts. I'm afraid I was the only there who got it.
Well, Sweden and Spain didn't build any new big guns ships, they just didn't scrap the ones they had which a a somewhat different thing.The fact that USA, Italy, Japan, UK, Germany, France and lesser power powers like Sweden and Spain had big gun ships after the Mitchell test proves they weren't buying it either.
When you get a chance, give this a read:Mitchell provided a sort of proof-of-concept, but the structure of the experiment meant that it was pretty much useless in terms of doctrine as well as tactics. Of course bombs can and do sink ships, but even 20 years after Mitchell's experiment, there was no way to put the idea into practical effect. The same tactics against maneuvering warships did little aside from moving some water around.
In a sense, using -17s for skip-bombing is a tacit admission that using high-level bombers to sink ships under power and moving at sea was a woefully-inefficient way to put ordnance on target against a moving ship. Ever the practical general, Kenney's support of the shift in tactics bespeaks a need to make those heavies more useful for anything more than raising spouts in the water.
As such, it cannot be fairly said that skip-bombing proved Mitchell right, in practice.